Recollections and Letters of Robert E. Lee
, by Lee, Robert EdwardNote: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
- ISBN: 9780486461823 | 0486461823
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 10/19/2007
This remarkable portrait of the idol of the Confederacy features personal reminiscences by his son as well as the general's letters to his family. Dating from the Mexican-American War in the 1840s to Lee's death in 1870, they provide intimate glimpses of a well-known but enigmatic man.
Robert E. Lee's youngest son and namesake served in the Civil War, advancing from private to captain. With this 1904 publication, he provided valuable historic insights into his famous father's life.
Services in the United States Army | p. 3 |
Captain Lee, of the Engineers, a hero to his child | |
The family pets | |
Home from the Mexican War | |
Three years in Baltimore | |
Superintendent of the West Point Military Academy | |
Lieutenant - Colonel of Second Cavalry | |
Suppresses "John Brown Raid" at Harper's Ferry | |
Commands the Department of Taxes | |
The Confederate General | p. 24 |
Resigns from Colonelcy of First United States Cavalry | |
Motives for this step | |
Chosen to command Virginia forces | |
Anxiety about his wife, family, and possessions | |
Chief adviser to President Davis | |
Battle of Manassas | |
Military operations in West Virginia | |
Letter to State Governor | |
Letters to Wife and Daughters | p. 48 |
From Camp on Sewell's Mountain | |
Quotation from Colonel Taylor's book | |
From Professor Wm. P. Trent | |
From Mr. Davis's Memorial Address | |
Defense of Southern ports | |
Christmas, 1861 | |
The General visits his father's grave | |
Commands, under the President, all the armies of the Confederate States | |
Army Life of Robert the Younger | p. 69 |
Volunteer in Rockbridge Artillery | |
"Four Years with General Lee" quoted | |
Meetings between father and son | |
Personal characteristics of the General | |
Death of his daughter Annie | |
His son Robert raised from the ranks | |
The horses, "Grace Darling" and "Traveller" | |
Fredericksburg | |
Freeing slaves | |
The Army of Northern Virginia | p. 91 |
The General's sympathy for his suffering soldiers | |
Chancel-lorsville | |
Death of "Stonewall" Jackson | |
General Fitzhugh Lee wounded and captured | |
Escape of his brother Robert | |
Gettysburg | |
Religious revival | |
Infantry review | |
Unsatisfactory commissariat | |
The Winter of 1863-4 | p. 112 |
The Lee family in Richmond | |
The General's letters to them from Camps Rappahannock and Rapidan | |
Death of Mrs. Fitzhugh Lee | |
Preparations to meet General Grant | |
The Wilderness | |
Spottsylvania Court House | |
Death of General Stuart | |
General Lee's illness | |
Fronting the Army of the Potomac | p. 128 |
Battle of Cold Harbour | |
Siege of Petersburg | |
The General intrusts a mission to his son Robert | |
Battle of the Crater | |
Grant crosses the James River | |
General Long's penpicture of Lee | |
Knitting socks for the soldiers | |
A Christmas dinner | |
Incidents of camp life | |
The Surrender | p. 144 |
Fort Fisher captured | |
Lee made Commander-in-Chief | |
Battle of Five Forks | |
Retreat of the Army of Northern Virginia | |
The General's farewell to his men | |
His reception in Richmond after the surrender | |
President Davis hears the news | |
Lee's visitors | |
His son Robert turns farmer | |
A Private Citizen | p. 162 |
Lee's conception of the part | |
His influence exerted toward the restoration of Virginia | |
He visits old friends throughout the country | |
Receives offers of positions | |
Compares notes with the Union General Hunter | |
Longs for a country home | |
Finds one at "Derwent," near Cartersville | |
President of Washington College | p. 179 |
Patriotic motives for acceptance of trust | |
Condition of college | |
The General's arrival at Lexington | |
He prepares for the removal of his family to that city | |
Advice to Robert, Junior | |
Trip to "Bremo" on private canal-boat | |
Mrs. Lee's invalidism | |
The Idol of the South | p. 198 |
Photographs and autographs in demand | |
The General's interest in young people | |
His happy home life | |
Labours at Washington College | |
He gains financial aid for it | |
Worsley's translation of Homer dedicated to him | |
Tributes from other English scholars | |
Lee's Opinion Upon the Late War | p. 218 |
His intention to write the history of his Virginia campaigns | |
Called before a committee of Congress | |
Preaches patience and silence to the South | |
Shuns controversy and publicity | |
Correspondence with an Englishman, Herbert C. Saunders | |
Family Affairs | p. 235 |
The General writes to his sons | |
To his wife at Rockbridge Baths | |
He joins her there about once a week | |
Distinguished and undistinguished callers at his Lexington home | |
He advocates early hours | |
His fondness for animals | |
An Ideal Father | p. 252 |
Letters to Mildred Lee | |
To Robert | |
To Fitzhugh | |
Interviewed by Swinton, historian of the Army of the Potomac | |
Improvement in grounds and buildings of Washington College | |
Punctuality a prominent trait of its President | |
A strong supporter of the Y. M. C. A. | |
Mountain Rides | p. 264 |
An incident about "Traveller" | |
The General's love for children | |
His friendship for Ex-President Davis | |
A ride with his daughter to the Peaks of Otter | |
Mildred Lee's narrative | |
Mrs. Lee at the White Sulphur Springs | |
The great attention paid her husband there | |
His idea of life | |
An Adviser of Young Men | p. 280 |
Lee's policy as college president | |
His advice on agricultural matters | |
His affection for his prospective daughter-in-law | |
Fitzhugh's wedding | |
The General's ovation at Petersburg | |
His personal interest in the students under his care | |
The Reconstruction Period | p. 299 |
The General believes in the enforcement of law and order | |
His moral influence in the college | |
Playful humour shown in his letters | |
His opinion of negro labour | |
Mr. Davis's trial | |
Letter to Mrs. Fitzhugh Lee | |
Intercourse with Faculty | |
Mrs. R. E. Lee | p. 318 |
Goes to Warm Springs for rheumatism | |
Her daughter Mildred takes typhoid there | |
Removes to Hot Springs | |
Her husband's devotion | |
Visit of Fitzhugh and bride to Lexington | |
Miss Jones, a would-be benefactor of Washington College | |
Fate of Washington relics belonging to Mrs. Lee's family | |
Lee's Letters to His Sons | p. 339 |
The building of Robert's house | |
The General as a railroad delegate | |
Lionised in Baltimore | |
Calls on President Grant | |
Visits Alexandria | |
Declines to be interviewed | |
Interested in his grandson | |
The Washington portraits | |
The New Home in Lexington | p. 357 |
Numerous guests | |
Further sojourns at different Baths | |
Death of the General's brother, Smith Lee | |
Visits to "Ravensworth" and "The White House" | |
Meetings with interesting people at White Sulphur Springs | |
Death of Professor Preston | |
Failing Health | p. 376 |
The General declines lucrative positions in New York and Atlanta | |
He suffers from an obstinate cold | |
Local gossip | |
He is advised to go South in the spring of 1870 | |
Desires to visit his daughter Annie's grave | |
The Southern Trip | p. 388 |
Letters to Mrs. Lee from Richmond and Savannah | |
From Brandon | |
Agnes Lee's account of her father's greetings from old friends and old soldiers | |
Wilmington and Norfolk do him honour | |
Visits to Fitzhugh and Robert in their homes | |
A Round of Visits | p. 412 |
Baltimore | |
Alexandria | |
A war-talk with Cousin Cassius Lee | |
"Ravensworth" | |
Letter to Doctor Buckler declining invitation to Europe | |
To General Cooper | |
To Mrs. Lee from the Hot Springs | |
Tired of public places | |
Preference for country life | |
Last Days | p. 431 |
Letter to his wife | |
To Mr. Tagart | |
Obituary notice in "Personal Reminiscences of General Robert E. Lee" | |
Mrs. Lee's account of his death | |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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